Ferdinand Ludwig Christian von Schönberg

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Ferdinand Ludwig Christian von Schönberg (born November 11, 1750 in Oberreinsberg ; † July 3, 1829 in Herzogswalde ) was an electoral governor and manor owner .

Life

He came from the Meissen noble family von Schönberg and was the son of Major Christian Ferdinand von Schönberg (1720–1756) on Oberreinsberg in the Electorate of Saxony and his wife Sophia Amalia von Kreutzen. In contrast to other family members, he proposed an administrative career in the service of Elector Friedrich August III. von Sachsen, who was appointed King of Saxony in 1806.

After his father's death, he took over his manor in Oberreinsberg. In the early romantic era he was interested in acquiring the ruins of the Rudelsburg castle, which was romantically situated on the Saale and to which the Kreipitzsch manor belonged as a farm yard . His mother's ancestors owned both estates for many decades. However, the last male representative of the von Kreutzen family died without heirs, so that both goods fell into other hands, namely that of August Ferdinand Graf von Zech . Due to the failure to separation of feudal and allodial Ferdinand Ludwig Christian reached by Schoenberg an agreement with Graf von Brühl, where Count von Zech had resold Rudelsburg with the manor Kreipitzsch 1796 and was new so in 1797 the owner of an der Saale in office Naumburg located goods.

family

Ferdinand Ludwig Christian von Schönberg married Friederika Dorothea Sophia von Tümpling (1754–1820) in 1770 . One of his sons was the chamberlain Franz von Schönberg .

literature

  • Gothaisches Handbuch des Adels , Adel A, Vol. XIV, p. 127.
  • Carl Peter Lepsius: The ruins of the Rudelsburg u. Saaleck is shown in their historical relationships according to documented news . Creutz, Magdeburg 1854 ( digitized version )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Carl Peter Lepsius: The ruins of the castles Rudelsburg u. Saaleck is shown in their historical relationships according to documented news . Magdeburg 1854